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Showing 1 to 15 of 82 results
Goldstein, Harvey – British Educational Research Journal, 2015
A response is made to a paper that urges the use of the Rasch model for educational assessment. This paper argues that the model is inadequate and that claims for its efficacy are exaggerated and technically weak.
Descriptors: Reader Response, Item Response Theory, Educational Assessment, Evaluation Methods
Holmes, Leonard – British Educational Research Journal, 2013
This article responds to that by Hinchliffe and Jolly, published in an earlier issue of this journal, exploring graduate identity and employability. Their article espousedly draws upon the conceptualisation of graduate identity, as formulated by this present author. This article argues that Hinchliffe and Jolly have given insufficient attention to…
Descriptors: Employment Potential, Self Concept, Graduates, Realism
James, Mary – British Educational Research Journal, 2012
We live in difficult times--socially, economically and politically--and it is right that learned societies, such as the British Educational Research Association, reflect on their purpose and direction. We cannot take for granted the social contract that supports the funding of social science and educational research. This paper reflects on…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Social Sciences, Educational Researchers, Cooperation
Ryan, Mary – British Educational Research Journal, 2011
Civic participation of young people around the world is routinely described in deficit terms, as they are labelled apathetic, devoid of political knowledge, disengaged from the community and self-absorbed. This paper argues that the connectivity of time, space and social values are integral to understanding the performances of young people as…
Descriptors: Social Environment, Economic Factors, Citizenship, Discourse Analysis
Clarke, Gill; Boorman, Georgie; Nind, Melanie – British Educational Research Journal, 2011
Young people, particularly girls, constructed in the education system as having behavioural, emotional and social difficulties are amongst the least represented voices in research. Frequently denied a place to speak from, we direct attention to the importance of hearing girls, who are troubled and troubling--deviating from the rules of school and…
Descriptors: Participatory Research, Females, Adolescents, Foreign Countries
Fejes, Andreas – British Educational Research Journal, 2011
This article focuses on how confession operates in contemporary discourses on reflective practices. By revisiting and mobilising Foucault's genealogy of confession in relation to how reflective practices are mobilised in an in-service training programme for healthcare assistants (HCA) in elderly care, it is argued that the HCAs are shaped as their…
Descriptors: Reflection, Self Disclosure (Individuals), Allied Health Occupations Education, Inservice Education
Kelly, Anthony – British Educational Research Journal, 2009
This article is a response to the growing criticisms of the British Educational Research Association (BERA) and Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) ethical guidelines on anonymity and pseudonymity as default positions for participants in qualitative educational research. It discusses and responds to those criticisms under four…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Research, Research Methodology, Research Design
Abraham, John – British Educational Research Journal, 2008
This article examines the important data on pupils' perceptions of setting and mixed-ability classes in 45 comprehensive schools in England collected by Hallam and Ireson. It is argued that the finding that most pupils prefer setting to mixed-ability classes requires closer scrutiny and more careful interpretation. The conclusion that such…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Foreign Countries, Student Attitudes, Case Studies
Mendick, Heather – British Educational Research Journal, 2008
This article provides an approach to understanding the widely acknowledged difficulties experienced by young people in the transition from pre-16 to post-16 mathematics. Most approaches to understanding the disenchantment with and drop-out from AS-level mathematics focus on curriculum and assessment. In contrast, this article looks at the role of…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Education, Dropouts, Foreign Countries
Hammersley, Martyn – British Educational Research Journal, 2008
Furlong and Oancea's influential framework for assessing the products of applied and practice-based educational inquiry raises some important issues about the criteria by which research should be judged. They begin by outlining the current significance of the issue, and some of the uncertainties surrounding the definition of applied and…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Educational Research, Criteria, Educational Researchers
Noden, Philip; Goldstein, Harvey – British Educational Research Journal, 2007
This is a brief response to some of the issues raised by Gorard and Fitz in their paper, "What counts as evidence in the school choice debate?" published in the "British Educational Research Journal" v32, n6, 2006. Gorard and Fitz claim a "basic arithmetic error" (p. 807) in giving equal weighting to all LEAs (Noden, 2000). The authors would not…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Choice, Reader Response, Misconceptions
Beard, Colin; Clegg, Sue; Smith, Karen – British Educational Research Journal, 2007
This article argues that we need richer conceptions of students as affective and embodied selves and a clearer theorisation of the role of emotion in educational encounters. These areas are currently under-researched and under-theorised in higher education. The first part of the article explores the literature on emotion. The second reports on a…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Higher Education, Learning Processes, Case Studies
Scott, David – British Educational Research Journal, 2007
This article offers a defence of critical realism in the face of objections Nash (2005) makes to it in a recent edition of this journal. It is argued that critical and scientific realisms are closely related and that both are opposed to statistical positivism. However, the suggestion is made that scientific realism retains (from statistical…
Descriptors: Realism, Educational Research, Research Methodology, Social Theories
Fuller, Alison; Unwin, Lorna; Felstead, Alan; Jewson, Nick; Kakavelakis, Konstantinos – British Educational Research Journal, 2007
This paper argues that contemporary workplaces give rise to many different forms of knowledge creation and use, and, as a consequence to different forms of learning and pedagogical approaches. Some of these are utilised to the benefit of the organisation and employees (though not, necessarily, in a reciprocal manner), but others are buried within…
Descriptors: Employees, Work Experience Programs, Educational Environment, Foreign Countries
Ivanic, Roz; Edwards, Richard; Satchwell, Candice; Smith, June – British Educational Research Journal, 2007
In this report, it is argued that the most salient factor in the contemporary communicative landscape is the sheer abundance and diversity of possibilities for literacy, and that the extent and nature of students' communicative resources is a central issue in education. The text outlines the conceptual underpinnings of the Literacies for Learning…
Descriptors: Research Design, Literacy Education, Adult Education, Literacy

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